276
276
Nov 21, 2012
11/12
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KQED
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eye 276
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it used to be so... special. didn't that used to be a movie theater? >> what? >> that. >> no. >> what did it used to be? >> it was the old bank. >> huh. i bet there's old money in there. >> i'm not going in there. the floor fell in. >> well, that would be awesome if there was, like, thousands and thousands of dollars. >> tyler! those are ours! drop 'em! kaylie! >> drop 'em! >> kaylie! >> when we can't afford to pay our bills, like our house bills and stuff, i'm afraid, like, we'll get homeless. me and my brother will starve. you never know what'll happen in your life. so, yeah. >> my name is jasmine, and i am nine years old, and i live with my brothers joshua, jaylen and jonny. >> my name is jonny davis. i'm 13 years old, going to be 14 in three months. we are in the salvation army homeless shelter. my dad had got a business, and he was making about a good $5,000 a month. we had good and fancy things then. we had, like, a three-bedroom house. our living room had a 32-inch flat-screen tv in there. my mom's and dad's room had a 42-inch flat-screen tv in their roo
it used to be so... special. didn't that used to be a movie theater? >> what? >> that. >> no. >> what did it used to be? >> it was the old bank. >> huh. i bet there's old money in there. >> i'm not going in there. the floor fell in. >> well, that would be awesome if there was, like, thousands and thousands of dollars. >> tyler! those are ours! drop 'em! kaylie! >> drop 'em! >> kaylie! >> when we can't afford to pay our...
451
451
Nov 6, 2012
11/12
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WETA
tv
eye 451
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those pastors would use anything. i mean, he was called a pawn of jews and catholics, certainly an outsider. this whole issue of, you know, is he black enough, you know, began to arise. >> narrator: with mixed success, he tried to build coalitions for three years. but he had become frustrated. he wrote about it in a letter to a friend. >> "it's tough. lots of driving, lots of hours on the phone trying to break through lethargy, lots of dull meetings. lots of frustration." >> at that point, he begins thinking about, "is there some other way to do the same job that i'm trying to do?" which is lift people out of poverty. >> narrator: he decided to move on, this time to law school. >> he said to some of his community organizing buddies, he needed that credential, that harvard law degree, to access the corridors of power. >> narrator: christmas-time in 1968, mitt romney returned to detroit from his mormon mission. his mother and father were waiting at the airport, and so was his high school girlfriend, ann davies. >> ann i
those pastors would use anything. i mean, he was called a pawn of jews and catholics, certainly an outsider. this whole issue of, you know, is he black enough, you know, began to arise. >> narrator: with mixed success, he tried to build coalitions for three years. but he had become frustrated. he wrote about it in a letter to a friend. >> "it's tough. lots of driving, lots of hours on the phone trying to break through lethargy, lots of dull meetings. lots of frustration."...
430
430
Nov 23, 2012
11/12
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KQED
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eye 430
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rafael eledge: so what have you brought in for us today? woman: a gun that belonged to my great-great-grandfather. he owned a brewery here in san antonio in the menger hotel. and teddy roosevelt came to the hotel and drank. he was known to do that from time to time. and actually, that's also one of the hotels where they raised some of the soldiers for the rough riders. yes. that's what local lore is. yes, yes, the rough riders. across the top of the barrel we have the colt's patent mark and also the new york city production location. and what it is is a model 1851 colt's patent revolver. it's not made in 1851. that's just the model. they made these on up until 1873, which was still way before teddy roosevelt. if we turn the gun over, we have the serial number. it's 128,000. and thanks to mr. colt's bookkeepers, we know that that was made in 1862. oh, okay. so it was made during the heart of the civilar. what's special about it is that we have the letter e. yes. and that's very important for a colt firearm. that lets us know that it was to b
rafael eledge: so what have you brought in for us today? woman: a gun that belonged to my great-great-grandfather. he owned a brewery here in san antonio in the menger hotel. and teddy roosevelt came to the hotel and drank. he was known to do that from time to time. and actually, that's also one of the hotels where they raised some of the soldiers for the rough riders. yes. that's what local lore is. yes, yes, the rough riders. across the top of the barrel we have the colt's patent mark and...
298
298
Nov 14, 2012
11/12
by
WMPT
tv
eye 298
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to support us after she's gone. after she's done it, i'm sure there won't be an autopsy or anything because she is terminal with lung cancer. so if she slips into a coma and dies, everyone will think it was just her cancer and the natural causes that did it. >> our perspective is what we do is absolutely legal, and we do not believe that we could be prosecuted or that there could be anything but a frivolous lawsuit brought against us. but nevertheless, the law is murky in the majority of the states. and so the organization draws its line. we have our eligibility criteria, we have our protocols, we have certain rules that we believe keep us on the right side of the law. we, under no circumstances, will ever be the source of the medication. we, under no circumstances, will absolutely ever be in the position of administering medication. no one does this to you. it is not euthanasia. it is not lying there and waiting for someone to administer the medication for you. >> narrator: although compassion & choices insists tha
to support us after she's gone. after she's done it, i'm sure there won't be an autopsy or anything because she is terminal with lung cancer. so if she slips into a coma and dies, everyone will think it was just her cancer and the natural causes that did it. >> our perspective is what we do is absolutely legal, and we do not believe that we could be prosecuted or that there could be anything but a frivolous lawsuit brought against us. but nevertheless, the law is murky in the majority of...
305
305
Nov 16, 2012
11/12
by
KRCB
tv
eye 305
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because it's what guides us. it's what... it allows us the opportunity to govern ourselves. >> over a thousand left limbs in iraq and afghanistan. but congssmarehbg voted against additional critical funding for prosthetic... >> jon tester votes to raise taxes... >> ryssdal: it's not hard to find political free speech in montana today. you see it all the time in what seems to be an endless run of political attack ads. >> and voted to raise the debt limit six times. >> ryssdal: the amount of money being spent is amazing. >> it could be $20 million on broadcast television. how do you like them apples? in the state of montana. >> ryssdal: so long as i know where the apples are coming from, i'm all right. that's the question. i don't know where the apples are coming from. >> right. we don't know where the apples are coming from and that's the problem here. >> ryssdal: david parker is a professor at montana state university. he's been tracking the tv ad spending in this senate race. >> it is incredibly difficult to act
because it's what guides us. it's what... it allows us the opportunity to govern ourselves. >> over a thousand left limbs in iraq and afghanistan. but congssmarehbg voted against additional critical funding for prosthetic... >> jon tester votes to raise taxes... >> ryssdal: it's not hard to find political free speech in montana today. you see it all the time in what seems to be an endless run of political attack ads. >> and voted to raise the debt limit six times....
397
397
Nov 9, 2012
11/12
by
KRCB
tv
eye 397
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there's hundreds of us-- hundreds, thousands of us. look, 31,000 scientists and engineers signed a statement to the contrary to what you just read. >> hockenberry: the oregon petition? >> yes. >> hockenberry: the 14-year-old petition is not exactly an exclusive club. a bachelor of science degree is all it takes to get you on the list. this document, skeptics claim, counters the scientific consensus on global warming. now, are they all scientists? >> yes. one-third of them have ph.d.s. look, they are not specialists in climate. >> hockenberry: well, some were celebrities and friends... >> eh... >> hockenberry: it's a time- honored tactic by the skeptics: authentic-looking documents and reports that don't stand up to independent scrutiny. singer also signed the oregon petition. this is not his first time going up against accepted science. >> hockenberry: was the science around chlorofluorocarbons hyped, the science around secondhand smoke hyped, the science around the ozone layer hyped, going back ten, 15, 20 years? >> i'm happy to discu
there's hundreds of us-- hundreds, thousands of us. look, 31,000 scientists and engineers signed a statement to the contrary to what you just read. >> hockenberry: the oregon petition? >> yes. >> hockenberry: the 14-year-old petition is not exactly an exclusive club. a bachelor of science degree is all it takes to get you on the list. this document, skeptics claim, counters the scientific consensus on global warming. now, are they all scientists? >> yes. one-third of...